Industry Reviews

These results pertain to our NYC-based and Online programs in our most recent reports. For more information about them, to understand how they were calculated, or to see the the rest of our results, simply view our Jobs Outcomes Reports.

Making education accessible to everyone

Access Labs Initiative in Brooklyn is a new effort by WeWork and Flatiron School to expand access to coding via zero upfront tuition. It’s our belief that education — and especially coding education — should be accessible to underserved communities and students who otherwise might not be able to afford tuition. Located in Dumbo, Access Labs offers Flatiron School’s unparalleled Software Engineering Immersive curriculum to those earning under $35,000 annually, and students pay tuition once securing a job. It’s not too good to be true — let’s make education accessible to everyone.

Zero upfront tuition

Open only to students earning less than $35,000 annually, Access Labs Initiative requires no upfront deposit or tuition payment. (See tuition details)

Dedicated career coaching

Career coaches mentor our students through an effective job search via resume review, mock interviews, and strategies for building a job opportunity pipeline and getting a foot in the door at top-choice companies.

Invested instructors

Knowing how to code doesn’t mean you know how to teach. With experience in the field and the classroom, our instructors are unparalleled. Access Labs coding bootcamp students learn from the best.

How Flatiron School Makes New Programmers — In Just 12 Weeks

With a new take on education that falls somewhere between self-taught prodigy and four-year computer science degree, the Flatiron School promises to turn coding bootcamp students with little programming experience into developers.

Flatiron and Re:Coded Teach Refugees How to Code

“[Refugees] face a huge challenge: finding work in a foreign country with an unfamiliar language. But there’s one school that aims to give refugees a running start by teaching them a universal language: the language of coding.”

Flatiron Offers Underrepresented Students Fast Track to Good Jobs

PBS’s Paul Solman visits Flatiron to talk to students with unexpected paths to tech – including a college dropout reinventing her career and a mother returning to the workforce after raising her children – and explores how this coding bootcamp is increasing diversity in the industry.

NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio Shares Flatiron Alum’s Career Transformation

Supporting his family on minimum wage, George Taveras “needed a break through… and he found [Flatiron’s] NYC Web Development Fellowship. With that training, George was able to transform his life. Today, this community college-dropout with limited prospects is making $75,000 a year in his tech job.”